Shаreholders in Salomon Inc. (“Salomon”), the corporate parent of Salomon Brothers Inc. (“Salomon Brothers”), brought a derivative suit in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Robert P. Patterson, Jr., Judge). They alleged securities and common law claims on behalf of Salomon and Salomon Brothers, all stemming from the Treasury Bill auction scandal that rocked Wall Street a few years ago.
The defendаnts, ex-Salomon Brothers officials, had signed agreements with Salomon Brothers providing for arbitration of any disputes arising out of their employment. They therefore moved to compel arbitration under the Federal Arbitration Act (the “FAA”), 9 U.S.C. § 1 ei seq. Judge Patterson granted the motion and referred the matter to the New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”), the arbitral forum designated in the arbitration agreements. The NYSE declined to arbitrate the dispute, and the defendants went
The defendants now appeal, arguing that under First Options, Inc. v. Kaplan, — U.S. -,
I.
In 1991, certain brokers at Salomon Brothers made unauthorized bids during a Treasury Bill auction. This enabled Salomon Brothers to obtаin a near monopoly on the T-Bills sold in that auction. Afterwards, Salomon Brothers’ General Counsel learned of the chicanery and notified John Gutfreund, at that time the CEO and Chairman of the Board of Salomon Brothers, as well as the President, CEO, and Chairman of the Board of Salomon. He also notified Thomas Strauss, who was both the President of Salo-mon Brothers and the Vice Chairman of the Board of Salomon, and John Meriwether, who was a Managing Director and the Vice Chairman of the Board of Salomon Brothers and was also the supervisor of the broker who orchestrated the bidding scheme.
Gutfreund, Strauss, and Meriwether did nothing. Federal authorities, however, discovered the bid-rigging, and Salomon Brothers and others have subsequently paid millions of dollars in penalties imposed by the SEC and the Justice Department.
In 1991, several shareholders in Salоmon Brothers’ corporate parent, Salomon, brought a derivative suit against Gutfreund, Strauss, Meriwether (collectively, the “defendants”), and others, alleging several securities and common law claims. The suit was just one of many federal suits stemming from the auction scandal, all of which were assigned to Judge Patterson.
The derivative suit crawled along. In 1994, the defendants belatedly remembered that each of them had signed an agreement to arbitrate (under the Constitution and rules of the NYSE) any dispute arising out of their employment by Salomon Brothers. Accordingly, they moved to stay the three-year old derivative suit and to compel arbitration before the NYSE. Judge Patterson granted the motion.
Before the NYSE, the plaintiffs vigorously contended that the matter was not arbitrable and that the NYSE should decline to arbitrate it. Invoking the NYSE’s discretion to “dеcline in any case to permit the use of [its] arbitration facilities,” NYSE Const. Art. XI, § 3, the Secretary of the NYSE declined to arbitrate the dispute.
The defendants appealed the Secretary’s decision to the NYSE Board. The Board affirmed in a thorough opinion. It advanced several reasons justifying its decision not to arbitrate the matter, including that:
• under its decision in Diana v. Merrill Lynch, shareholder controversies were “ ‘not appropriately within thе mandatory provisions’ ” of its Constitution;
• “jurisdiction must be based on the consent of the parties to arbitrate,” and “neither the shareholders who initiated th[e] derivative action nor Salomon ... have consented to arbitration”;
• shareholders’ derivative litigation, which is governed by Fed.R.Civ.P. 23.1, is foreign to the procedures and mechanisms employed in NYSE arbitration.
The matter returned to Judge Patterson. The defendants moved for аn order compelling arbitration, staying trial pending arbitration, and appointing substitute arbitrators under § 5 of the FAA. Judge Patterson denied the motion from the bench:
The [NYSE] has determined not to take this matter and, accordingly, the agreement [to arbitrate] has been carried out by the members, in terms of what they had to*557 do pursuant to their agreement. Since the [NYSE] has determined not to accept jurisdiction, this Court is going to prоceed to trial....
The defendants then requested that the trial be delayed. Judge Patterson rejected their request:
I am not going to put this case off. This ease has been pending over three years now. You [the defendants] are just putting off the awful day.
_ I can see what is going on. And I don’t believe that plaintiffs are entitled, members of the class are entitled to have the matter put off. They are entitled to have prompt justice.
He set a trial date of October 10, 1995. Thereafter, he issued an order formally denying both the defendants’ motion to compel arbitration, and a motion to stay the trial pending appeal.
Pursuant to § 16 of the FAA, the defendants appealed, and promptly moved for a stay pending appeal and for an expedited appeal. This Court denied the stay without prejudice, and orderеd the appeal expedited. The defendants then asked Judge Patterson once again to stay the trial. He denied the motion. Finally, at oral argument in this Court, the defendants renewed their motion for a stay of the trial pending our decision. We denied that motion from the bench.
II.
On appeal, the parties focus almost exclusively on the Supreme Court’s recent decision in First Options. The defendants contend that Judgе Patterson, and not the NYSE, had to determine whether this dispute was arbitrable. See — U.S. at- -,
The plaintiffs, on the other hand, argue that Judge Patterson complied with First Options because the arbitration agreements at issue clearly and unmistakably assigned to the NYSE the power to determine arbitrability. See First Options, — U.S. at-,
We need not reach these issues, however, because, under the arbitration agreements, all disputes were to be arbitrated by the NYSE and only the NYSE, “in accordance with the [NYSE] Constitution and rules.” The NYSE Constitution clearly permits the NYSE to refuse the use of its facilities for the arbitration of any particular dispute. NYSE Const. Art. XI, § 3. When the NYSE so refuses, there is no further promise to arbitrate in another forum.
We review de novo a district court’s denial of a mоtion to stay an action pending arbitration. See Haviland v. Goldman, Sachs & Co.,
The question we decide, however, is not whether shareholder derivative suits are arbi-trable, but where this dispute—whatever its nature—may be arbitrated under the agreements. Although the federal policy favoring arbitration obliges us to resolve any doubts
Strauss had signed an employment аgreement with Salomon Brothers under which
any controversy between [Strauss] and any member or member organization arising out of [Strauss’s] employment by and with such member or member organization shall be settled by arbitration at the instance of any such party in accordance with the Constitution and rules then obtaining of the [NYSE].
Meriwether signed a similar agreement:
any controversy between [Meriwether] and any member or member organization or affiliate or subsidiary thеreof arising out of [Meriwether’s] employment or the termination of [Meriwether’s] employment shall be settled by arbitration at the instance of any such party in accordance with the arbitration procedure prescribed in the Constitution and rules then obtaining of the [NYSE].
Gutfreund apparently signed an arbitration agreement forty years ago, but no one can find it. In any event, Salomon Brothers, as a member of the NYSE, and Gutfreund, as an allied member of the NYSE by virtue of his Salomon Brothers employment, had agreed to abide by the Constitution and rules of the NYSE. The NYSE Constitution, in turn, provides that:
[a]ny controversy between parties who are members, allied members or member organizations and any controversy between a member, allied member or member organization and any other person arising out of the business of such member, allied member оr member organization ... shall at the instance of any such party be submitted for arbitration in accordance with th[e NYSE] Constitution and [NYSE rules]. .
NYSE Const. Art. XI, § 1.
This, then, is the sum and substance of the parties’ arbitration agreements. The defendants argue that the final clause of their respective arbitration agreements — which requires them to arbitrate “in accordance” with the provisions of the NYSE Constitution and NYSE rules — is simply a choice of law provision. Arbitration need not take place before the NYSE, they contend, so long as the NYSE’s rules govern in a proceeding brought before whichever arbitral body hears the dispute. We cannot agree.
We do not write on a clean slate, since we faced similar language in PaineWebber, Inc. v. Rutherford,
“in accordance with the rules, then obtaining, of either the Arbitration Committee of the New York Stock Exchange, American Stock Exchange [ (the “AMEX”) ], National Association of Securities Dealers [(the “NASD”) ] or, where appropriate, Chicago Board Options Exchange [ (the “CBOE”) ] or Commodity Futures Trading Commission [ (the “CFTC”) ].”
Id. at 107-08 (quoting the agreement). We held that this language “should be construed simply as an agreement to arbitrate before one of the [self-regulatory organizations],” e.g., the NYSE, AMEX, NASD, CBOE or CFTC, rathеr than in another arbitral forum, such as the American Arbitration Association. Id. at 108. We further held that the plaintiff had to “submit her claim to one of the ... fora provided for in the agreement or lose her right to arbitrate.” Id. at 109; accord Dean Witter Reynolds Inc. v. Prouse,
We are not the only Circuit to so hold. In Luckie v. Smith Barney, Harris Upham & Co.,
We are aware that some New York courts appear to have read similar clauses as mere choice of law provisions and not as an exclusive selection of a forum. See, e.g., Cowen & Co. v. Anderson,
Were our jurisdiction predicated upon diversity, there might be an argument that we should defer to the New York courts when construing the choice of law/forum prоvision. See Progressive Cas. Ins. Co. v. C. A Reaseguradora Nacional,
III.
Because the parties had contractually agreed that only the NYSE could arbitrate any disputes between them, Judge Patterson properly declined to appoint substitute arbitrators and compel arbitration in another forum. See Volt Info. Sciences, Inc.,
*560 If in the agreement provision be made for a method of naming or appointing an arbitrator or arbitrators or an umpire, such method shall be followed; but if no method be provided therein, or if a method be provided and any party thereto shall fail to avail himself of such method, or if for any other reason there shall be a lapse in the naming of an arbitrator or arbitrators or umpire, or in filling a vacancy, then upon the application of either party to the controversy the court shall designate and appoint an arbitrator or arbitrators or umpire, as the case may require, who shall act under the said agreement with the same force and effect as if he or they had been specifically named therein....
9 U.S.C. § 5.
Seizing upon § 5, the defendants argue that, by bringing suit in federal court, the рlaintiffs “fail[ed] to avail” themselves of the agreed upon method of arbitration, i.e., before the NYSE. They also contend that, because the NYSE refused to arbitrate the dispute, there was a “lapse in the naming of an arbitrator.” For both reasons, they maintain that, under § 5, Judge Patterson should have named substitute arbitrators and compelled arbitration. Properly construed, however, § 5 cannot support the weight the dеfendants place upon it.
The “failure to avail” argument need.not detain us long. That provision applies when an arbitration agreement designates an arbitrator, or specifies a procedure for selecting an arbitrator, and one of the parties refuses to comply, thereby delaying arbitration indefinitely. See, e.g., Pacific Reins. Mgt. Co. v. Ohio Reins. Corp.,
The “lapse” argument is no more compelling. Section 5 applies when there is “a lapse in the naming of an arbitrator ... or infilling a vacancy.” 9 U.S.C. § 5 (emphasis added). We believe that the “lapse” referred to in § 5 means “a lapse in time in the naming of the” arbitrator or in the filling of a vacancy on a panel of arbitrators, Pacific Reins. Mgt. Corp.,
We are not unaware that some district courts have appointed new arbitrators when the named arbitrators could not or would not proceed. See McGuire, Cornwell & Blakey v. Grider,
None of these cases, however, stands for the proposition that district courts may use § 5 to circumvent the parties’ designation of an exclusive arbitral forum. As we have already noted, we read the agreements here as providing for arbitration only before the NYSE. Thus, in contrast to Astra Footwear and Zechman, upon which the defendants so heavily rely, whether the NYSE would arbitrate the dispute “was central to the parties’ agreement to arbitrate.” Grider,
In addition, unlike Astra Footwear, here the “dominant intent” of the parties was “to arbitrate before particular arbitrators.” Id. at 909 (court could invoke § 5 because parties intended to arbitrate generally, rather than only if a certain forum was avаilable). Moreover, unlike Astra Footwear, here, the “equities of the case” favor proceeding to trial. Id. at 910. Four years have elapsed, after all, since this suit began. While that delay may not be the defendants’ fault, surely the plaintiffs are entitled to a speedy resolution of their claims.
Accordingly, Judge Patterson properly declined the defendants’ invitation to appoint substitute arbitrators over the plaintiffs’ objection. Cf. National Iranian Oil Co. v. Ashland Oil Inc.,
IV.
We conclude with a word of caution to district courts regarding First Options. When a party to an arbitration agreement moves to stay a proceeding pending arbitration or to compel arbitration under the FAA, the district court must determine whether, under the arbitration agreement, the court or the arbitrator is to decide questions of arbi-trability. See — U.S. at-,
That said, the arbitration agreements here required that any arbitration be before the NYSE, and not before any other arbitral forum. Accordingly, we will not disturb Judge Patterson’s decision to proceed to trial. The decision below is AFFIRMED.
